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Vice President JD Vance warned Iran that there is ‘another option on the table’ if the regime does not make a nuclear deal with the U.S.

Vance made the statement while speaking to reporters before boarding Air Force Two on Tuesday. A reporter referenced President Donald Trump’s musings about potentially deploying a second aircraft carrier strike group to the Middle East.

‘How confident are you in going the diplomatic route? Do you think that is still going to be successful or are we leaning more towards a military strike?’ the reporter asked.

‘The president has told his entire senior team that we should be trying to cut a deal that ensures the Iranians don’t have nuclear weapons,’ Vance responded.

‘But if we can’t cut that deal, then there’s another option on the table. So I think the president is going to continue to preserve his options. He’s going to have a lot of options because we have the most powerful military in the world. But until the president tells us to stop, we’re going to engage in these conversations and try to reach a good outcome through negotiation,’ he continued.

Vance went on to downplay pushes for regime change in Iran, saying a removal of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’s regime would be up to ‘the Iranian people.’

He said the Trump administration’s only focus is preventing the current Iranian regime from obtaining a nuclear weapon.

Vance’s comments come a day before Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is set to meet with Trump at the White House on Wednesday, with Iran expected to take center stage in the meeting.

In a phone interview with Axios, the president said Tehran ‘very much wants to reach a deal,’ but warned, ‘Either we make a deal, or we’ll have to do something very tough — like last time.’

Netanyahu, speaking before departing Israel for Washington, said he intends to present Israel’s position

‘I will present to the president our concept regarding the principles of the negotiations — the essential principles that are important not only to Israel but to anyone who wants peace and security in the Middle East,’ he told reporters.

U.S. and Iranian officials resumed talks in Oman this week for the first time since last summer’s 12-day war. The United States continues to maintain a significant military presence in the Gulf, a posture widely viewed as both deterrence and for holding leverage in negotiations with Tehran.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

LIVIGNO, Italy – Like a proud parent, young Alessandro Barbieri searched his phone, eager to show off his pride and joy.

“So many snowboard videos,” he said impatiently, scrolling through. “I want my cat.”

To know Barbieri, only 17 and nearing his Olympic debut for Team USA, is to know Bella.

She is a 3-year-old Maine Coon cat. Beautiful and expensive. Gray and white. A whopping 17 pounds, and tall enough to reach Barbieri’s waist when she stretches, he said.

Before long, Barbieri found Bella in his phone. He holds up a photo. Then another of her curled up, almost posing with her head upside down.

It makes him smile. Before competitions, in fact, Barbieri’s mother sends cat photos to him, wherever he might be, as a superstitious reminder of home.

“That’s why your nickname is ‘Kitty-Kitty, Meow-Meow,” said U.S. halfpipe teammate Chase Josey. True enough, said Barbieri, though he adjusted slightly: “Kitty-Cat, Meow-Meow.”

“Or you can use the Italian Stallion. That works as well.”

“No, no,” Josey replied. “Kitty-Kitty, Meow-Meow.”

In an odd way, it fits. Just because Barbieri is unique like that. Hailing from Portland, Oregon, he comes across as personable and endearing, impossible to view as a stranger for long and easy to remember.

The kid showed up to a pre-event press conference at Livigno Snow Park on Feb. 9 wearing sunglasses.

Beginning with the start of the men’s snowboarding halfpipe competition on Feb. 11, he will be an athlete to watch during these 2026 Milano Cortina Olympics. Quite possibly, Barbieri is America’s next great Olympic snowboarding talent.

Not me saying that. U.S. snowboarding legend Shaun White said it.

Being interviewed Feb. 5 on the Ralph Lauren Red Carpet at these Games, White said to “watch out for Alessandro,” earmarking Barbieri as a potential breakout star during these Olympics.

“He’s incredibly talented,” White said of Barbieri. “One of the last events, he landed two triples in his run, which I’ve maybe seen one person do before.”

Told of White’s comments, Barbieri beamed.

“Having Shaun say that about me, imagine your idol – like (Lionel) Messi – saying ‘Watch out for this kid,’” Barbieri said. “I grew up watching (White) and watching him dominate, and his mentality of winning at all costs. Just having him say that about me and believing in me that I’m kind of good at snowboarding is just crazy.”

While young, Barbieri is indeed a promising talent. He finished second in halfpipe at the Winter Youth Olympic Games in 2024. In February 2025, he finished third at a world cup event in Calgary. Multiple Olympics are likely in his future, but none set up more special than this one in Italy.

Because Barbieri’s parents are Italian. They immigrated to the U.S. from Italy in 2006, he said, two years before he was born. Barbieri said that he has been dreaming about this since he was much younger, having the chance to compete in an Olympics in Italy.

Lots of his family members are still in Italy, and many of them are planning to be on hand to watch him perform in Livigno.

“My parents, my uncles, my nieces, my cousins, my grandparents, it’s going to be like a big group of family,” he said. “So it’s going to be very cool.”

Sounds like it could be a lot of pressure, especially for a 17-year-old. Barbieri responded to that thought with a wave of the hand: “This might sound cocky, but I don’t get nervous.” He stressed that confidence was essential in the halfpipe, comparing it to driving a car or riding as a passenger in one. Meaning that if you are driving, you know your safety is in your hands.

As the press conference ended, Barbieri stood up, put the sunglasses back on and raised two fingers like a lead singer dropping the microphone after an encore.

“Kitty-cat, meow-meow: Out.”

Reach sports columnist Gentry Estes at gestes@gannett.com and hang out with him on Bluesky @gentryestes.bsky.social

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

  • Greg Sankey recently sided with the NCAA, at expense of Alabama, in a lawsuit over a player’s eligibility.
  • Sankey previously supported Alabama when it benefited the SEC’s brand, prestige and earnings.
  • An Alabama judge ultimately ruled against player Charles Bediako, upholding NCAA eligibility rules.

Down South, one big conspiracy theory has nothing to do with the moon or JFK.

Instead, the yearslong whopper that ran rampant within SEC terrain centered on conference commissioner Greg Sankey being an “Alabama homer.” A native New Yorker turned elephant backer. Secretly wrote all of his “A’s” in script handwriting.

Professional provocateur James Carville once alleged “collusion” between the SEC office and Alabama. Some might say the Ragin’ Cajun, an LSU alumnus, was the one suffering from bias, but I digress.

Here lately, Sankey sure is acting funny for a supposed “Alabama homer.” He must have forgotten his SEC office in Birmingham, aka East Tuscaloosa, operates as a Roll Tide cabal.

Or, maybe Sankey was just never the full-fledged Alabama homer some fans of rival teams made him out to be. Like most conspiracy theories, this one lacked sufficient proof.

Those old Alabama-SEC collusion claims shriveled last week. Sankey turned heel on Alabama and sided with the NCAA in a lawsuit to determine whether the Tide could continue playing former pro basketball player Charles Bediako in their march toward March.

Days after Sankey filed an affidavit supporting the NCAA, a judge in Alabama ruled against Bediako and in favor of the NCAA. This halted the NBA G League dropout’s days of dunking on college dudes.

Judge Daniel Pruet used legalese to explain his decision, language like Bediako “failed to establish that he would suffer irreparable harm” if he did not receive his desired ruling. He also cited NCAA bylaws.

NCAA “rules do not permit a student-athlete to participate in collegiate basketball, leave for the NBA, and return to the collegiate arena,” Pruet wrote. “All the evidence in the record indicates that the (NCAA) has consistently applied this specific rule.”

Left unwritten: The SEC commish casting his lot with the NCAA surely didn’t help Bediako.

Greg Sankey as ‘Alabama homer’ theory loses steam

So, what gives? Is Sankey an Alabama homer or a hater?

Neither.

He’s an SEC homer. That comes with the job. If Sankey and his office seemed like an Alabama homer before, maybe that’s because Nick Saban ruled college football. Saban’s high tides (and bountiful trophies) lifted the SEC’s boats.

If Sankey had to stump and maneuver a bit on behalf of Saban’s Alabama, well, that’s just good business.

Three years ago, Sankey summoned every ounce of propaganda he could muster while campaigning for the SEC’s champion, which wound up being Alabama, to get the final College Football Playoff spot, at the expense of undefeated Florida State.

Playoff rejection would have been costly to the SEC’s brand, ego, prestige and earnings. Anyway, what was good for Alabama also was good for the SEC, and it wasn’t particularly bad for college sports. It was just bad for Florida State and the ACC.

What Greg Sankey wrote in Charles Bediako affidavit

In this case, Bediako playing was fine for Alabama, but not especially beneficial to the SEC, on the whole. He didn’t even transform Alabama into a top national championship contender. He just made Alabama better than it was without him.

Bediako playing wasn’t ideal for Auburn when the former pro scored 12 points in Alabama’s 96-92 rivalry win, his final game before the judge’s ruling.

Other SEC teams aren’t playing guys who left college, declared for the NBA draft, played in the G League, and returned to college hoops years later, in violation of NCAA bylaws. As other teams follow the rules, Bediako and Alabama tried to sidestep them in court.

“Permitting former professional athletes to return to (college) competition creates a competitive disadvantage and fundamental unfairness for current student-athletes,” Sankey wrote in his affidavit in support of the NCAA.

Sankey has spent his career working within college sports. He worked in compliance on his way up the ladder. I suspect, at his core, he believes rules are good, a lack of rules is bad, rule-by-lawsuit is messy, and an ability to enforce eligibility rules is key to successful operation of any league.

Alabama coach Nate Oats and Bediako’s lawyer will point to the duplicity of the NCAA restricting Bediako from playing while permitting international players who previously played in foreign pro leagues or in the NBA G League, before later enrolling in college.

Hypocritical? Maybe.

Muddy? Absolutely.

Grounds for an injunction? Not according to an Alabama judge.

When Bediako left Alabama, declared for the draft and signed an NBA contract, NCAA rules said he wouldn’t be allowed to return to college ball. The rules still say that.

A healthy debate can be had about what it really means to be a pro athlete, when an NBA G Leaguer sues to get back in a college uniform, where he can earn more money. Amateurism is dead. Bediako wanted to leave one paycheck from the NBA G League for a better paycheck in college.

An Alabama homer would say, what’s the problem with that?

Sankey saw a problem. He’s no Alabama homer, after all.

Blake Toppmeyer is a columnist for the USA TODAY Network. Email him at BToppmeyer@gannett.com and follow him on X @btoppmeyer.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

When Unrivaled’s 1-on-1 tournament begins Wednesday, Feb. 11, the level of competition will be high, but it will have a backyard basketball feel.

‘The best part about getting to compete is you’re just able to kind of do something different,’ Unrivaled co-founder and Mist forward Breanna Stewart told USA TODAY Sports. ‘Do something that you’ve done at the playground or at the gym and just kind of showcase your skill.

‘This time, it’s probably even better just because our pods are position based … I feel like it’ll just be better matchups.’

The Miami-based 3-on-3 women’s basketball league brought back its 1-on-1 tournament for a second season, dividing the 32-player bracket into four pods. The pods were ranked and voted on by fans, players, coaches and media members. Four top seeds were then selected from the pods. After the final vote, Hive guard Kelsey Mitchell is the top seed from Pod A, Breeze guard Paige Bueckers for Pod B, Mist guard Allisha Gray for Pod C and Stewart for Pod D.

The players in this season’s tournament will compete for a portion of the tournament’s $300,000 prize pool. The winner gets $200,000, runner-up $50,000 and $25,000 each goes to the other two semifinalists. Still, Gray says, this isn’t your run-of-the-mill competition.

‘Everybody here is a top [WNBA] player. In my mind, it’s just like, even if I lose, I’ve lost to a great player,’ Gray shared with USA TODAY. ‘So it’s just great being competitive and just ― that’s what makes it so much different than an average just one-on-one game.’

Stewart, Gray’s teammate, also revealed that Unrivaled’s 1-on-1 tournament is very different. It leaves room for possibilities.’What makes this different is literally, it’s all eyes on you, and you’re [in] the center and the person you’re playing against,’ Stewart said. ‘[It’s] a way to kind of showcase what you got in a short stint, but also when it’s one game, anybody can beat anybody. So you never know what’s gonna happen.’

To Stewart’s point, several upsets happened in last year’s first round, including Shakira Austin beating Chelsea Gray and Kahleah Copper moving past Aliyah Boston. What’s more, in a moment that sent shockwaves through the tournament, Aaliyah Edwards upset Stewart, 12-0. The Mist forward didn’t score a single basket. Stewart joked with USA TODAY that she planned to do things a lot differently this season. Step one: score a basket. Step two: win a game by taking it ‘one step at a time, literally.’

Gray, however, is approaching Unrivaled’s tournament a bit differently. The Mist guard is having a stellar second, currently sixth in the league in points per game (20.0) and fifth in made 3-point shots per game (2.3). She also has six matchups of 20 or more points, including 30 points against the Lunar Owls on January 17.

During 2025’s Unrivaled 1-on-1 tournament, Gray lost to Edwards in the quarterfinals, 12-6. Edwards would go on to lose to Unrivaled co-founder Napheesa Collier. Collier is out for the season after surgery on both ankles. Still, the Mist guard isn’t letting that slow her down.

‘No matter who you put in front of me, I think I can beat them,’ Gray said. ‘I don’t fear no player here. So, I’m just looking to be able to have a good and fun, competitive matchup and a good time.’

Unrivaled’s 1-on-1 tournament promises to be great, starting with the opening round. Stewart pointed out she’s looking forward to seeing several guard-on-guard matchups ― Laces’ Brittney Sykes versus Mist’s Arike Ogunbowale and Phantom’s Natasha Cloud versus Rose’s Chelsea Gray ― before playfully saying that she and Gray, her fellow No. 1 seed and Mist teammate, are ‘ gonna go right at it’ during their individual opening matchups.

Based on the bracket structure, if Stewart, Gray, Bueckers or Mitchell advance deep into the tournament, there is a possibility the No.1 seeds could play each other in the later rounds. Stewart says playing against top players like Gray, Bueckers and Mitchell can be difficult.'[It’s] just a person playing against other three-level scorers,’ Stewart said. ‘You’re gonna try to put them in the toughest position. You’re gonna try to make them have tough, contested shots, but one seeds are one seeds for a reason. They’re gonna show why.’

Gray respectfully declined to share with USA TODAY what she planned to do with the money if she wins. ‘I don’t tell my secrets,’ she jokingly said.

Stewart revealed she hadn’t thought about what she might do. After thinking about it for several seconds, she mentioned she recently launched a foundation where she plans to refurbish parks in Syracuse, New York, and help unhoused youth with resources and opportunities. Her money could go there. Still, the more Stewart pondered, the funnier her answer became.

‘I don’t know. Maybe I’ll buy a watch,’ she eventually said, laughing. ‘An [Audemars Piguet.]

‘Listen, $200,000? The world is my oyster.’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The NHL is back at the Winter Olympics.

The league is sending its players for the first time since 2014. Though Finland is the defending champion after winning gold in Beijing in 2022, Canada is the star of the NHL era from 1998 to 2014.

The country won gold in 2002, 2010 and 2014, and Pittsburgh Penguins and Team Canada captain Sidney Crosby is looking to pick up his third gold medal. Sweden (2006) and the Czech Republic (1998) are the other winners in the NHL era.

So, who will skate off with a gold medal after the championship game on Feb. 22? USA TODAY asked for predictions for the gold, silver and bronze medal. Here is what our experts said:

Mike Brehm, USA TODAY

Gold: Canada

Silver: USA

Bronze: Czechia

Canada is the best of the best-on-best era. It hasn’t lost such a tournament since the 2006 Games, capturing two Olympics, the 2016 World Cup of Hockey and last year’s 4 Nations Face-Off. Team Canada is oozing with talent, featuring the top three NHL scorers who are at the Olympics. If the Canadians can get decent goaltending, they will be the best again.

Jace Evans, USA TODAY

Gold: Canada

Silver: USA     

Bronze: Sweden

The Canada net leaves a lot to be desired but there’s three reasons I’m picking Canada to win this year’s tournament: Connor McDavid, Nathan MacKinnon and Sidney Crosby – the two best forwards in the NHL and one of the greatest winners the sport has ever seen.

Helene St. James, Detroit Free Press

Gold: Canada

Silver: USA

Bronze: Sweden

USA has such a deep team, especially in goal, but Canada has Sidney Crosby, who can still take over a game and deliver in high-pressure situations.  

Ryan Kennedy, The Hockey News

Gold: Canada

Silver: USA

Bronze: Switzerland

Hockey is won down the middle and Canada has the best centers in the world. I can’t bet against a team featuring Connor McDavid, Nathan MacKinnon and Sidney Crosby, especially with such high stakes.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

LINCOLN, Nebraska – Trey Kaufman-Renn and CJ Cox each left Pinnacle Bank Arena with war wounds.

Kaufman-Renn suffered a cut under his left eye. Cox had a noticeable laceration on his right cheek.

They embodied everything about the 45 minutes it took Purdue basketball to beat eighth-ranked Nebraska, 80-77, in overtime on Tuesday, Feb. 10.

The Boilermakers should’ve never been in an extra session, having surrendered a 22-point second-half lead and missing four free throws in the final minute of regulation with its best three foul shooters.

Purdue couldn’t worry about that in the moment.

With Big Ten title hopes dwindling, the Boilermakers — despite all that had happened leading up to the final minute of overtime — showed championship-level poise that had coach Matt Painter taking a more positive spin on his team’s grit than a negative tone with losing a large lead.

‘I thought our effort was great,’ Painter said. ‘I thought we did a pretty good job executing.’

Only 11 turnovers in 45 minutes, nearly outrebounding the opponent with just two players (Oscar Cluff and Kaufman-Renn combined for 33 rebounds) and holding an elite 3-point shooting team to 37.5% all were positive signs to back up Painter’s positivity.

Purdue’s nearly catastrophic collapse showed signs of a team still reeling. In the same realm, the Boilermakers showcased their composure when many teams would’ve folded under the pressure from a red sea of 15,185 screaming fans.

The play that ultimately won Purdue the game surprised even the team’s star player.

Fletcher Loyer drove right, got stuck, spun to his left, turned back to his right and delivered a wraparound pass by his defender to Cluff, who spun left and banked in a left-handed hook shot with 5.2 seconds left.

Braden Smith was certain Loyer was going to attempt a shot. But Loyer stayed on two feet and maintained a coolness when the pressure was highest.

‘We’ve got to be able to be even keel and keep our composure in those moments,’ Smith said.

You take a top-10 road win any way you can get it, especially when the Boilermakers can ill afford to take any more losses if they hope to compete for a conference crown.

‘Great win. Us as a team, we need to win all of the rest of the games to have a share or win the Big Ten,’ Cox said. ‘This away game against a top-10 team in the country was a crucial win.’

When Cluff intercepted a long inbounds after Gicarri Harris’ two free throws with 1.5 seconds left, the Boilermakers could finally exhale.

At the same time, Purdue perhaps inhaled new life ahead of its final seven regular season games, now with a statement victory for its third win in a row.

It wasn’t perfect, but in some ways it was.

‘Obviously, adrenaline is going crazy right now,’ Cluff said. ‘It’s just the beginning honestly. We’ve got a huge couple of games coming up. I think this is the start of something. We’re going to keep rolling all the way until April.’

Sam King covers sports for the Journal & Courier. Email him at sking@jconline.com and follow him on X and Instagram @samueltking.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

  • Texas, Georgia are top national championship contenders from SEC.
  • Big Ten contenders start with Ohio State, Indiana but don’t end there.
  • Looking for a sleeper pick? Try USC Trojans or longshot Utah.

Can the SEC put an end to Big Ten football’s national championship streak? That quest begins with four SEC teams, although you could make a compelling case Miami of the ACC is the most dangerous threat in 2026 to the Big Ten’s string of dominance.

The SEC runs deeper than either the ACC or the Big 12, though, so it remains the biggest threat to the Big Ten’s throne. And, yes, it is the Big Ten’s throne now. No escaping that reality anymore, unless your head is buried deep, deep in the sand in the Deep South.

On this edition of “SEC Football Unfiltered,” a podcast from the USA TODAY Network, hosts Blake Toppmeyer and John Adams go head-to-head drafting their top six national championship contenders.

Adams gets the No. 1 pick in their draft, which unfolds in snake-draft fashion. Each team may only be picked once. In other words, once a team is off the board, it cannot be picked by the other host.

In the end, four SEC teams come off the board, plus four from the Big Ten, while each host builds out his six-team roster in search of the 2026 national champion.

Drafting 2026 college football national championship contenders

Adams’ first pick: Texas. The Longhorns cleaned up in the portal, and Arch Manning finished the season looking more like the quarterback we expected him to be all along.

Toppmeyer’s first pick: Ohio State. The Buckeyes always produce one of the nation’s most-talented rosters. The schedule is tough, but Julian Sayin, Jeremiah Smith and Bo Jackson are a good start toward a third straight playoff bid.

Toppmeyer’s second pick: Notre Dame. With CJ Carr back as starting quarterback and another accommodating schedule, the Irish are pointed toward the playoff.

Adams’ second pick: Miami. Mark Fletcher and Malachi Toney return as offensive linchpins, and Darian Mensah could be a quarterback upgrade.

Adams’ third pick: LSU. Lane Kiffin’s done it again, with another tremendous transfer class, and he’s proven he knows how to assemble a roster full of fresh faces.

Toppmeyer’s third pick: Georgia. I’d like Georgia even more if it had done more in the portal. Even as is, Georgia is probably the SEC’s best-positioned team for a playoff bid, with only a few major landmines on the schedule.

Toppmeyer’s fourth pick: Indiana. Several key departures, but Josh Hoover should keep Curt Cignetti’s assembly line of good transfer quarterbacks rolling. He’s part of a good portal class.

Adams’ fourth pick: Texas Tech. Mega booster Cody Campbell promised to “double down” after Texas Tech’s CFP quarterfinal exit. When a billionaire doubles down, I buy in. The Red Raiders spent big for quarterback Brendan Sorsby.

Adams’ fifth pick: Oregon. The Ducks’ script the past two years: Look really good until folding in the playoff against the eventual national champion. Will they fold again in January 2027? Maybe, but they’re the best bet at this stage of the draft.

Toppmeyer’s fifth pick: Texas A&M. A tough schedule makes me wonder if the Aggies are ripe for win-loss regression. But, when a playoff team returns its quarterback, it can’t be ignored at this stage. The Aggies need their transfer class to hit to offset notable losses.

Toppmeyer’s sixth pick: Southern Cal. Trusting a Lincoln Riley defense is a fool’s errand, even after the hire of TCU legend Gary Patterson as defensive coordinator. Quarterback Jayden Maiava should keep the completions and the points coming, at least.

Adams’ sixth pick: Utah. How’s this for a shot in the dark? Am I bold or just crazy? Before you answer that, consider how well quarterback Devon Dampier played in the final few games of last season.

Also considered: Mississippi, Alabama.

Eyeing college football’s next champ? Start here

Adams’ roster of national champion picks: Texas, Miami, LSU, Texas Tech, Oregon, Utah

Toppmeyer’s thoughts on Adams’ lineup: I wanted Miami with my No. 3 pick. Alas. That one stings.

***

Toppmeyer’s roster of national champion picks: Ohio State, Notre Dame, Georgia, Indiana, Texas A&M, USC.

Adams’ thoughts on Toppmeyer’s lineup: You’re heavy on the Big Ten. If the B1G’s streak continues, that’s trouble for my team, unless Oregon saves the day.

Where to listen to SEC Football Unfiltered

  • Apple
  • Spotify
  • iHeart
  • Google

Blake Toppmeyer is the USA TODAY Network’s national college football columnist. John Adams is the senior sports columnist for the Knoxville News Sentinel. Subscribe to the SEC Football Unfiltered podcast, and check out the SEC Unfiltered newsletter, delivered straight to your inbox.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

MILAN — NHL players are back in the Winter Olympics, and the competition gets underway today with two preliminary round games.

Finland takes on Slovakia in the early game at Santaguilia Ice Hockey Arena. In evening action, host Italy takes on Sweden.

Finland is the defending champion after winning the 2022 Beijing Olympics. Canada leads the NHL era (1998 to 2014) with gold medals in 2002, 2010 and 2014. Czechia won in 1998 (Nagano) and Sweden in 2006 (Torino).

The USA won silver medals in 2002 and 2010. It last won a gold medal in 1980 at the Lake Placid Olympics. The Americans begin their preliminary round Thursday against Latvia.

Here are scores from today as games wrap up.

Watch Olympics figure skating on Peacock

Olympic men’s hockey schedule today

All times Eastern.

  • 10:40 a.m.: Slovakia vs. Finalnd
  • 3:10 p.m.: Sweden vs. Italy

Where to watch Olympic men’s hockey

How the Olympics men’s hockey tournament works

The 12 teams are divided into three groups. They are:

  • Group A: Canada, Switzerland, Czechia, France
  • Group B: Finland, Sweden, Slovakia, Italy
  • Group C: USA, Germany, Latvia, Denmark

Teams play one game each against the other three teams in their group. Countries get three points for a regulation win, two for an overtime win, one for an overtime/shootout loss and zero for a regulation loss.

After the preliminary round is complete, teams are seeded 1 through 12 under the following criteria:

  • Higher position in the group
  • Higher number of points
  • Better goal difference
  • Higher number of goals scored for 
  • Better IIHF world ranking

Why are there no fights in Olympic hockey?

International Ice Hockey Federation prohibits fighting, and it could lead to an ejection and a suspension.

‘Fighting is not part of international ice hockey’s DNA,’ the organization states in Rule 46 of the IIHF rulebook.

‘Players who willingly, participate in a ‘brawl/fight’ so-called ‘willing combatants,’ shall be penalized accordingly by the referee(s) and may be ejected from the game,’ the rulebook says. ‘Further supplementary discipline may be imposed.’

How long is NHL Olympic break? Key remaining dates in 2025-26 season

The NHL will take a break from Feb. 6-24 for the 2026 Winter Olympics. There are seven games on the schedule on Feb. 5. No trades can take place during the Olympic break.

When is the Olympic men’s hockey tournament?

The tournament starts Feb. 11 with two games. The USA opens play Feb. 12 against Latvia. All teams will play three games during the round robin, which runs through Feb. 15. The top four teams get byes to the quarterfinals.

Playoff qualification games are on Feb. 17 for teams ranked fifth through 12th, quarterfinals are Feb. 18 and semifinals are Feb. 20.

The bronze medal game is Feb. 21 and the gold medal game is Sunday, Feb. 22.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

CORTINA d’AMPEZZO, Italy – Danny Casper never cries. 

He’s not the emotional type. He’s actually somewhat aloof. He and his curling teammates joke that he’s never focused enough to really be thrown off in-game. But looking back on the last two years from atop the Italian Dolomites at his first Winter Olympics, Casper can’t help but choke on his words. Can’t stop the tears from welling in his eyes. Can’t not feel all the feelings.

‘I don’t want to say I never thought I’d be here, because that’s all I thought about every day,” Casper told USA Today. “… But at the same time, it’s like, I did mean it when I said, ‘I guess I’ll just have to watch my friends there and cheer them on.”

Curling is Casper’s life. He’s been doing it for 13 years, since he was one of very few juniors at the Ardsley Curling Club in New York hanging around on the ice with adults gracious enough to let him tag along. Ask him what he does outside of the sport, and he won’t really have an answer for you. (‘Yeah, maybe not the healthiest thing,’ he conceded sarcastically. ‘Not sure.’)

But two years ago, he had to give it up. Had to ‘forget curling’ for a little while. A decision his body made for him, because he could no longer walk. ‘Could not do anything really.’ That included operating his cell phone, which meant it definitely included picking up and throwing a forty-something-pound curling stone.

Casper developed Guillain-Barré syndrome, or GBS – an autoimmune disease in which the body’s immune system attacks the nerves. This can lead to numbness, weakness and paralysis. It took three months for doctors to figure out what was going on with him. He’s been living with the diagnosis, which affects one to two people in every 100,000, for two years and counting.

Days are better now than they used to be. He’s a skip at the Winter Games after all, having dethroned John Shuster & Co. at the U.S. Olympic Trials to qualify. But the pain still gets to him. After making it through this four-year cycle, Casper’s not sure he could continue into 2030 if he still feels this way then. (The exact cause and cure for GBS is unknown, though most people recover fully. Casper was initially told it’d go away within eight months to a year.)

He’s doing his best to take this experience in. He wishes he was better at that sort of thing. ‘I’m always, like, screwing around during the game and stuff, and I don’t think the moment has gotten to me in good and bad ways,’ Casper said. ‘I almost would like to be a little bit more, like, ‘Wow, I’m here at the Olympics.’”

But there are moments, like Tuesday’s press conference, when Casper was asked what it meant to be in Cortina after all he’d been through. His voice caught in his throat and his chin quivered as he answered. Competing at the highest level is special. But competing at all?

‘At the end of the day, I’m curling,’ Casper said. ‘It’s pretty much all I can ask for.”

Casper initially brushed off the first indication that something was amiss back in 2024. He was competing at USA Curling Mixed Doubles Nationals. He doesn’t usually compete in mixed doubles. And he doesn’t usually sweep, which he was doing for partner Vickey Persinger. 

Sweeping wasn’t one of Casper’s strengths. So when he started dealing with neck and back pain at the event, he chalked it up to a skill issue as opposed to a medical one. But over the next two weeks, he ‘went downhill super fast.”

Casper bounced from doctor to doctor for three months. They threw a phone book of diagnoses his way. Maybe it’s multiple sclerosis, or MS, a disease that ’causes breakdown of the protective covering of nerves,” according to Mayo Clinic. MS can cause symptoms including but not limited to numbness, weakness, trouble walking and vision changes.

Maybe it’s a vitamin D deficiency. Casper scoffed at the thought. No way a vitamin deficiency was causing all this. Then he Googled it, and understood where they were coming from. (“I think I did a pretty good job of not really Googling for a while, but had to a little bit,” Casper joked. “And then it’s like, you know, ‘You’re dead.’”)

So he spent a month taking vitamin D pills. Which did nothing. Great, he thought, another month wasted.

The USOPC (U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee) referred him to a doctor through its partnership with the University of Florida hospital system. After reviewing all of Casper’s information and giving him an EMG (electromyography) nerve test, he diagnosed the 22-year-old with GBS.

‘A lot of people think, oh, I was sick, and I got through it, and now I’m here at the Olympics. Like, ‘What a story,’ or whatever. It’s not over at all.”

Casper takes medication for treatment, changing up his regiment every so often to meet his needs. He started with gabapentin, a nerve blocker. Then ‘a bunch of muscle relaxer stuff.” A few months ago, he started taking carbamazepine, a medication typically used for seizures.

It’s working. For the most part. But Casper didn’t want to risk a different cocktail of medications that’d make him feel worse at the Olympics. He’ll wrap up this season, go home, and see about trying something new this summer.

Once his dexterity started to return, Casper decided to get back into curling. He missed more than half of the 2024-25 season. At nationals last season, Casper and USA Curling alternate Rich Ruohonen, 30 years Casper’s senior, decided each skip would play every other game. Basically load management.

Together they won Olympic Trials, kicking off a team led by American curling legend John Shuster to clinch their spot in Cortina. A shocking feat as every upset is made even more impressive because of how often they had to work with another skip while Casper was away.

‘We’ve got absolutely nothing to lose,’ he said, though that doesn’t take away from the ultimate goal: Gold.

One of the hardest parts of living with GBS, Casper said, is that you can’t see it. No one can.

He wants others living with invisible autoimmune diseases to know it’s OK to lean on people for support. Even if it feels weird or hard. 

Just like a curling game. Casper captains the team, but he has to rely on sweepers Aidan Oldenburg and Ben Richardson to guide the rock to the button. Friends, family and teammates are the sweepers in Casper’s life. They helped guide him to Cortina for a chance at gilded glory.

Reach USA TODAY Network sports reporter Payton Titus at ptitus@gannett.com, and follow her on X @petitus25.

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The NHL is on an Olympic break, but prospects around the world are continuing to grow. 

Player development is an ongoing process. A player’s draft year is one of the most integral of their career because it so often shapes the perspectives of scouts, general managers and fans alike. Until these players reach the NHL, the picture they paint in their draft year is often the only one people will remember. 

With so many of the best prospects in the world entering the stretch run of their season, they have begun to showcase what kind of players they are. Let’s look at the picture the top prospects have painted to this point and what trait each of them is most going to be known for as we head toward June’s NHL draft.

Top 10 NHL draft players

1. Frolunda (Sweden) left wing Ivar Stenberg

Stenberg’s draft year will be remembered for his incredible scoring pace in the Swedish League, where he is on pace to break the league scoring record for a draft-eligible player. It will also be remembered for his impressive performance at the World Junior Championship, where he improved as the tournament went on, leading Sweden to a gold medal. Stenberg has painted a very complete picture. 

2. Penn State (NCAA) left wing Gavin McKenna

As much as McKenna has taken some strides on the ice since the world juniors, the most unfortunate thing that will be remembered about his draft year is the incident outside of a bar where he allegedly broke someone’s jaw and now faces three charges, none of which have been proven in court to this point. He’s painted some beautiful pictures on the ice with his elite-level skill and puck handling, but so much of that has been overshadowed by this off-ice incident. 

3. Boston University (NCAA) center Tynan Lawrence

Lawrence’s season will be remembered in two parts: his injury-filled yet dominant start to the USHL season and the process-driven yet underwhelming production at the NCAA level.  The process has been there. Lawrence has continued to showcase his speed, skill and intelligence away from the puck, and he’s generated very good underlying results. The production hasn’t followed, however.

4. North Dakota (NCAA) defenseman Keaton Verhoeff

Verhoeff’s growth at the NCAA level might be the defining factor of his season. He’s built upon his skill and IQ to play a strong two-way game. When he was at the World Junior Championship, he started outside of the lineup and ended up looking like one of their better all-around defenders. Verhoeff’s game has become more complete as the season has gone on, and that will be what people remember about his draft year. 

5. Jukurit (Finland) defenseman Alberts Smits

Without a doubt, Smits’ season will be remembered for skyrocketing up draft boards. He was outstanding at the world juniors, where he helped Latvia nearly upset Canada. He’s also participating in the Olympics with Latvia’s men’s team. On top of playing at the Liiga level in Finland, Smits has been outstanding. He’s a bit of a raw prospect, but he’s arguably the most intriguing defenseman in the class with all of the tools to be a top-tier defender. 

6. Djurgarden (Sweden) center Viggo Bjorck

Bjorck has consistently proved the doubters wrong this year. He played himself into a premier role in the Swedish League. On the Swedish world juniors roster, it wasn’t Anton Frondell who was tasked with taking the big faceoffs or playing in key defensive situations. It was Bjorck, the undersized center. He’s slowly proving he’ll be the exception to the rule of teams wanting big centers. Bjorck can play down the middle at the pro level. 

7. HV71 (Sweden) defenseman Malte Gustafsson

What we’ll remember from Gustafsson’s season is that when he took the step up to the SHL from Sweden’s junior level, his game improved across all three zones. Gustafsson added a physical element when playing against men instead of boys, which pairs well with his excellent mobility. He’s been a more confident puck-mover against men as well. It’s not often that a player gets better against stronger competition, but Gustafsson has done exactly that. 

8. Vancouver (WHL) left wing Mathis Preston

It’s been a year of underwhelming production and missed opportunities for Preston. He hasn’t quite scored at the rate everyone expected, and when Vancouver acquired him from Spokane, he was hurt and out of the lineup. Preston has all of the offensive skill, intellect, and pace-setting speed that you could want from a forward. He generates excellent scoring chances. He just hasn’t finished those chances as often as expected.

9. Tappara (Finland) center Oliver Suvanto 

The difficult part about choosing a defining moment or trait in Suvanto’s season is that his game as a whole is understated and defensively oriented. He’s a very steady center who understands his role is to support everyone across the ice. Suvanto has a good shot, and he plays a heavy game. His defining trait is that whoever drafts him will be pretty happy not to have to worry about his game.

10. Blainville-Boisbriand (QMJHL) defenseman Xavier Villeneuve

Villeneuve is the perfect example of how an undersized defender can be a difference-maker. With the puck, there isn’t a more dynamic blueliner in the NHL draft class. In his own end, he’s used his feet and stick to disrupt play. Once he gets the puck away from an opposing attacker, he instantly becomes an attacker himself. Villeneuve will be remembered for his dynamism and skill but also his growth as an overall player.

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